DS News

MortgagePoint May 2025

DSNews delivers stories, ideas, links, companies, people, events, and videos impacting the mortgage default servicing industry.

Issue link: http://digital.dsnews.com/i/1535182

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 77 of 83

MortgagePoint » Your Trusted Source for Mortgage Banking and Servicing News 76 May 2025 J O U R N A L Market Trends CONCESSIONS NEAR RECORD LEVELS AS SELLERS ATTEMPT TO WOO BUYERS A new analysis from Redfin shows that in 44.4% of U.S. home sale transactions in Q1, home sellers made concessions to pur- chasers. That is only behind the 45.1% record high set at the beginning of 2023, and it is up from 39.3% a year ago. Data given by Redfin buyers' agents nationwide, spanning rolling three- month periods from 2019 to the present, served as the basis for this analysis. When an agent notes that a seller of- fered something that helped lower the buyer's overall cost of buying the house, that is considered a concession. This could include funds for mortgage-rate buydowns, closing costs, and/or repairs. Situations where the seller reduced the advertised price of their house or did so as a result of a negotiation with a buyer are not included. According to Portland, Ore- gon-based Redfin Premier Real Estate Agent Chaley McVay, most of the offers she writes for buyers ask the seller to make concessions, particularly if it's the buyer's first time buying a house. "Buyers used to ask for concessions to cover little things like repairs. Now they're negotiating concessions so they can afford to buy a home," McVay said. "A lot of sellers are offering money for mortgage-rate buydowns, and I recently had one seller cover seven months of HOA fees for the buyer." Due to a shift in the property market in favor of buyers, sellers are making more and more compromises. Due to high housing prices, high mortgage rates, and economic uncertainty, demand from homebuyers is slow. At the same time, with listings at a five-year high, sellers are up against increasing competition from one another. Generally speaking, purchasers have more negotiating power when they have more selections. Additionally, a lot of homes are over- priced, which means they stay on the market longer and force sellers to make compromises to find a buyer, according to Redfin brokers. "Sellers are feeling nervous because a lot of them bought at the top of the market in 2021 and 2022 and will now be re-buying at a higher mortgage rate," McVay said. "They're worried about net proceeds. That's why I recommend my buyers ask for concessions instead of a lower sale price—it can be a win-win because then the buyer is catching a break, and the seller doesn't have to go below the price they had in their head." In Q1, 71.3% of home-sale deals in Seattle involved concessions from sell- ers to buyers, the greatest percentage of any of the 24 major U.S. metropolitan regions Redfin examined. That is the biggest rise among the metros Redfin examined, nearly doubling the 36.4% share from a year ago. "It's super common to see seller concessions for condos and new-con- struction townhomes, but less so for single-family homes—unless the single-family home has been sitting on the market for a while," said Stephanie Kastner, a Redfin Premier real estate agent in Seattle. "Condos have become a tougher sell because of skyrocketing HOA fees and insurance. And builders are offering concessions because it's in their best interest to keep sale prices high; they're willing to pay buyers' closing costs and maybe provide a free washer-dryer if it means they don't have to drop the listing price." Portland, Oregon saw the next big- gest increase, up 14.2 percentage points to 63.9%, which was the second-highest rate. Next came Los Angeles (+11 ppts to 56.1%); San Jose, California (+10.6 ppts to 16.7%); and Houston (+6.2 ppts to 46%). After Seattle and Portland, the highest concession rates are in Atlanta, San Diego, and Denver.

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of DS News - MortgagePoint May 2025